Oxford: John Beaufoy Publishing, 2010. Octavo, paperback, colour photographs. This is an easy-to-use identification guide to 280 species of mushroom and toadstool most commonly found in Britain, Ireland, and other parts of Northern Europe. The user-friendly introduction includes an overview of distribution, habitats, mushroom structure and nomenclature. There is useful... More

Oxford: John Beaufoy Publishing, 2012. Octavo, paperback, colour photographs. A user-friendly introduction includes an overview of distribution, the anatomy of a mushroom, nomenclature and useful information on hunting for and cooking with mushrooms. The identification section then divides into three categories: edible mushrooms, inedible (but not poisonous) mushrooms, and poisonous... More

New York: Ballantine Books, 2013. Octavo, dustwrapper, BRAND NEW. Follow Langdon Cook on his journey into the woods with the iconoclasts and outlaws who seek the world's most coveted ingredient, and one of nature's last truly wild foods: the uncultivated, uncontrollable mushroom. Chefs pay top dollar to showcase these elusive... More

Collingwood: CSIRO, 1997. Large octavo, text illustrations, fine copy in dustwrapper. In all, 60 volumes are due to be published which will describe all the indigenous and naturalised fungi in Australia. Volume 2A and its companion 2B provide a guide to the names that have been used in Australia for... More

Melbourne: CSIRO Publishing, 2017. Large octavo, laminated boards, colour photographs, text illustrations. The family Inocybaceae are a diverse cosmopolitan group of gilled fungi. Until now, only a small number of species had been described from Australia, but with this major revision a total of 137 species are recognised, of which... More

Collingwood: CSIRO, 2003. Large octavo, dustwrapper, colour illustrations. Together with its companion volume, Fungi of Australia volume 2A, this volume lists all the names applied to Australian macrofungi and provides up-to-date accepted name for each species, along with a comprehensive listing of relevant literature. Volume 2B covers larger fungi in... More

Collingwood: CSIRO, 2006. Large octavo, laminated boards, black and white line illustrations. The anamorphic fungal genus Septoria is one of the largest genera of plant pathogens, causing a range of disease symptoms including leaf and fruit spots in agricultural crops, as well as horticultural and native plants. These fungi are... More

Lewes: Ivy Press, 2013. Large octavo, dustwrapper, colour photographs, line drawings, maps. Colourful, mysterious, and often fantastically shaped, fungi have been a source of wonder and fascination since the earliest hunter-gatherers first foraged for them. Today there are few, if any, places on Earth where fungi have not found themselves... More

New York: Skyhorse Publishing, (2012. reprint). Octavo, paperback, colour photographs. There are thousands of different species of fungi, so it can be hard to tell which are edible and which are poisonous when you are picking them for yourself in the wild. Safe and unsafe species often closely resemble each... More